- The character must generally have "physical as well as conceptual qualities."
- The character must be "sufficiently delineated" to be recognizable as the same character whenever it appears. If the character has appeared in different productions, it must display consistent, identifiable character traits and attributes, although the character need not have a consistent appearance.
- The character must be "especially distinctive" and "contain some unique elements of expression."[ref]Id. Citations omitted.[/ref]
Holy Blind Justice, Batman! The Batmobile Is a Character!
10/02/2015
Stephen Carlisle
No Subjects
The old adage that "justice is blind" came to mind again last week, but not in a good way. In the latest head-scratching decision from the 9th Circuit Court, a Court of Appeals for the first time has ruled that an inanimate object portrayed in an audio-visual work was in fact a "character" capable of copyright protection. The case, DC Comics v. Towle,[ref]2015 WL 5569084 citations are to the Westlaw pagination.[/ref] pitted the venerable comic book company against a manufacturer of full scale, real-life, working "Batmobiles."
The defendant, Mark Towle, produced two different models of the Batmobile. The first was patterned after the Batmobile as it appeared in the 1960's television show Batman.[ref]Id. at 3[/ref] The second was patterned after the Batmobile as it appeared in the 1989 feature film, Batman.[ref]Id.[/ref] He marketed both of the vehicles as "Batmobiles" and utilized the domain name batmobilereplicas.com to help him sell these rather expensive ($90,000) life sized toys.[ref]Id.[/ref]
DC Comics sued Towle in 2011 alleging copyright infringement, trademark infringement and unfair competition.[ref]Id.[/ref] Towle defended on the grounds that the Batmobile was not copyrightable, that even if it was, that DC did not own the copyright of the Batmobile as it was depicted in the motion picture and television shows.[ref]Id.[/ref] He admitted copying the elements of the Batmobile from the audio-visual works in question,[ref]Id.[/ref] so all the standard elements of copyright infringement are present, if in fact a car can be protected by copyright. The District Court ruled in favor of DC Comics and Towle appealed to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.
The 9th Circuit first dispensed with the defense that DC did not own copyright to the vehicles in question. It ruled that the reservation by DC of all of the merchandising rights to the depictions later made by ABC and Warner Bros. was sufficient to show ownership of the intellectual property. From there, the Court wades into uncharted waters.
Previously, the 9th Circuit had ruled that the car "Eleanor" from the original and remake of Gone in 60 Seconds "might" be eligible for copyright protection as a character.[ref]Halicki Films, LLC v, Sanderson Sales and Marketing, 547 F.3d 1213 (9th Circuit Court of Appeals 2008)[/ref] Here, it takes a full blown stand that a car absolutely can qualify as a character. Citing to its previous decision in the Gone In 60 Seconds case, the Court boldly states "Even when a character lacks sentient attributes and does not speak (like a car), it can be a protectable character…"[ref]DC Comics at 5.[/ref] The problem for the Court is that this particular holding does not appear in the previous ruling at all.
In order to be a protectable character, the Court rules a three part test must be performed.
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